Chicago Sun-Times

HAHN SECRETLY EXTENDS RENTERIA’S CONTRACT

South Siders likely to make aggressive push for superstar infielder Machado

- GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmye­r@suntimes.com | @GDubCub A year after trying to trade for him, Sox executive vice president Ken Williams (bottom, right) and general manager Rick Hahn are uniquely positioned to spend big to land Manny Machado (above).

CARLSBAD, Calif. — Buckle up for another wild winter of free-agent spending in Chicago baseball.

But this time, leave the Cubs out of it. It’s the White Sox with the wheelbarro­w full of cash this year. The rebuilding South Siders are in a unique position to outspend their deep-pocketed crosstown rivals in the most anticipate­d free-agent market in years.

“Everything we’ve done for the last few years was planned for us to have all of our options available to us at this time,” executive vice president Ken Williams said this week as the general managers meetings ushered in the unofficial start of the hot-stove league.

Those options, not surprising­ly, include generation­al free agents Bryce Harper and, more specifical­ly, Manny Machado, who are front and center in the White Sox’ landscape, if not their sights.

After stockpilin­g touted prospects the last two years while stripping down payroll obligation­s, the Sox are nearing a competitiv­e pivot point with less money on the books than any other team in the majors.

And the timing of that enormous spending power has baseball executives buzzing this week about the likelihood the Sox will be one of the most aggressive suitors for Machado, the 26-year-old superstar infielder projected to command a deal in the neighborho­od of 10 years and at least $300 million.

“While we are not yet in position realistica­lly to be adding so-called finishing pieces, we are in a position where we need to be opportunis­tic with regards to the free-agent market,” general manager Rick Hahn said last month. “You can’t always control when certain players become available.”

Williams and Hahn won’t address specific players they’re targeting. But in addition to short-term pitching needs, their interest in Machado as a centerpiec­e for their next competitiv­e window is an open secret.

They were heavily involved last winter in trade talks for Machado before the Orioles took him off the market.

And one major-league executive predicted during the season that the Sox would be a top challenger to the Phillies for Machado as a free agent this winter, with multiple national reports in the past week linking him to the Sox.

“We’ve gotten to the point where you can start seeing the transition into the next stage coming into sight,” Hahn said Tuesday, “whether that’s in ’19 or the year after. You’re starting to see it come together at the minorleagu­e level. And as a result we’re interested in adding to that group where opportunit­ies arise.”

The models for a big-ticket signing at this point of the rebuilding process include the Nationals’ signing hard-nosed Phillies outfielder Jayson Werth to a seven-year, $126 million contract coming off a last-place 2010 season, and the Cubs’ signing Jon Lester to a six-year, $155 million deal coming off a last-place 2014 season.

The Nationals won 98 games two years later to start a run of four division titles in six years. The Cubs won 97 games in Lester’s first year — a year ahead of their own projection­s — with playoff trips every season since.

“I don’t think there’s a factor that we’re not looking at these days,” Williams said when asked about those comparison­s, stressing the depth of the club’s analysis of its own timeline and the available players.

Whether any of Machado’s postseason antics or lollygaggi­ng lowered initial projection­s of his market value, “It couldn’t have helped,” said one American League executive this week.

But the talent that made him a four-time All-Star by age 25 and a two-time Gold Glove winner at third base is the stuff of championsh­ips.

And he’s widely regarded as a good teammate, though the Sox have never shied away from so-called bad-boy reputation­s.

Could he soon become the highest paid player in franchise history?

“You don’t know what you can and cannot afford until you get to that point [of negotiatin­g],” said Williams, who called the projection­s for Harper and Machado speculatio­n. “Everyone has a limit.

“We’ll take a look at what the market bears and then we’ll sit down and have a discussion.”

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